Relevance: GS-2: Devolution of Powers and Finances up to Local Levels and Challenges Therein.
Key Phrases: ULBs, IIHS, 74th CAA 1992, Article 243-P to 243-ZG, A 243-W, A 243-Y; IGTs, Own Tax Revenue, Own Non-Tax revenue, User Charges;
Context
- The Financial Empowerment of ULBs (Urban Local Bodies) is necessary for the practical realisation of democracy at the grassroots level.
- Recently, the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS) analysed data from 80 ULBs across 24 States between 2012-13 and 2016-17 to understand ULB finance and spending, and found some key trends.
Key Highlights
What are ULBs?
- These are the local self-government at the City/ town level.
- 74th Constitutional Amendment Act 1992 provided constitutional
status to ULBs. It added Part IX-A to the constitution.
- Articles 243-P to 243-ZG deal with the ULBs.
- Article 243-W specifies subjects which have been delegated to ULBs by the constitution, these are explicitly mentioned in Schedule 12.
- Article 243-Y deals with the provision of the creation of the State Finance Commission to devolve grants.
- The Act provided for the constitution of 3 types of municipalities in
every state
- A Municipal Corporation
- For a larger urban area.
- Municipal Council
- For a smaller urban area.
- Nagar Panchayat
- For a transitional area.
- A Municipal Corporation
- There are 8 types of ULBs
- Municipal Corporation
- Municipality
- Notified Area Committee
- Town Area Committee
- Cantonment Board
- Township
- Port Trust
- Special Purpose Agency
Sources of Revenue and avenues of expenditure for ULBs and their trend
- The ULBs’ key revenue sources are taxes, fees, fines and charges, and transfers from Central and State governments.
- The Transfers from Central and State governments are known as IGTs
(Inter-Governmental Transfers).
- Transfer from Central Government
- Decided by Union Finance Commission and are generally awarded for the interventions as per specific reforms.
- Transfer from State Government
- In the form of Grants in aids and devolution of states’ collection of local taxes.
- Transfer from Central Government
- ULBs’ own revenue includes revenue from taxes on property and advertisements.
- ULBs’ non-tax revenue consists of user charges and fees from building permissions and trade licencing.
- The share of ULBs' own revenue and non-tax revenue to total revenue measures ULBs’ fiscal health and decides its autonomy.
- Class I-A cities (population of over 50 lakh) are more self-dependent than Class I-B (population of 10 lakh-50 lakh) and Class I-C (population of 1 lakh-10 lakh) cities, which are more dependent on IGTs.
Issues/Concerns with Municipal Finances
- Lack of Self-dependency for revenues
- The ULBs’ own sources of revenue were less than half (47%) of their
total revenue.
- Own Tax revenue is 29%
- Own non-Tax revenue is 18%
- ULBs lacked revenue buoyancy as their share in GDP of own revenue was only 0.5% for the five-year period.
- Property Tax contributed to a meagre 0.15% of the GDP.
- It is the single largest contributor to ULBs’ Own Revenue.
- For the developing country and developed countries, it has been observed at around 0.6% and 1% of GDP respectively.
- The ULBs’ own sources of revenue were less than half (47%) of their
total revenue.
- High dependency on IGTs
- From 2012-13 to 2016-17, IGTs accounted for about 40% of the ULBs’ total revenue.
- Despite this, the scale of IGTs in India remained at around 0.5% of GDP, which is far lower than the international average of 2% to 5% of GDP.
- Variation in state of finances depending upon the size of the
city
- Tax revenue is the largest revenue source for larger cities, while smaller cities are more dependent on grants.
- For Class I-A cities
- External revenue dependency gradually reduced over time, from around 27% in 2012-13 to about 15% in 2016-17.
- For Class I-B and Class I-C cities
- Own Revenues (Tax + Non-tax) remained stagnant, despite the increase in the areas of these cities.
- Operations and Maintenance (O&M) expenses have increased but
still remain inadequate
- The share of O&M expenses in ULBs’ total revenue expenditure increased from about 30% in 2012-13 to about 35% in 2016-17.
- As per the High-Powered Expert Committee for estimating the investment requirements for urban infrastructure services, O&M Expenses incurred in 2016-17 covered 1/5th of the requirement forecast.
- The non-tax revenues were short of the O&M expenditure by around 20%
- this contributed to the increasing revenue deficit in ULBs.
Way Forward
- To increase the Tax revenue
- The base for collection of property taxes must be increased.
- To increase non-tax revenue
- Increased availability of land resources to the businesses and extracting user charges will shore up non-tax revenue.
- Meeting O&M Expenses
- Cost recovery for services such as water supply, solid waste management, transportation and wastewater management must be ensured through user charges to ensure reduced pressure on the revenue budget.
- Stabilizing IGTs and using them as a means to ensure fiscal
discipline
- Revenue assigned to ULBs from the State governments must be
increased.
- Atma Nirbhar Bharat Yojana has a provision for rewarding states for the empowerment of ULBs.
- A share of the State and Centre’s GST proceeds must be allocated to
ULBs
- This will provide a cushion to ULBs which will be taking steps to decrease their dependency on IGTs.
- IGTs can also incentivise ULBs to deliver better service quality and
maintain fiscal discipline.
- 15th Finance commission has recommended mandatory submission of audited accounts before disbursing grants.
- IGTs should also incentivize the ULBs which come up with their own
market-based loan instruments.
- Bangalore MC was the 1st MC in India to launch a municipal bond (1997).
- In Dec 2020, Lucknow issued a municipal bond.
- Revenue assigned to ULBs from the State governments must be
increased.
Conclusion
- Growing fiscal deficits, constraints in tax base expansion, and weakening of institutional mechanisms that enable resource mobilisation are a few challenges to the financial health of the ULBs. But the same can be countered by increasing IGTs, strengthening ULBs to extract User changes and shoring their revenues.
Source: The Hindu
Mains Question:
Q. Comment about the financial condition of ULBs. What are the challenges and what more can be done to financially empower them?